2004 in Australia


The following lists events that happened during 2004 in Australia.

Incumbents

January

  • 2 January – "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin feeds a crocodile at his famous Australia Zoo while holding his one-month-old baby son, Robert Irwin. The incident generates a great deal of criticism both nationally and internationally over the next few days.
  • 8 January – 33 asylum seekers detained on Nauru decide to suspend their month-long hunger strike after hearing of plans for an Australian medical team to travel to the island.
  • 13 January – Spirit of Tasmania III makes its inaugural trip from Sydney to Devonport.
  • 16 January –
  • *Prime Minister John Howard discusses the issues of security and missile defense with the United States Chairman of Joint Chief of Staff, General Richard Myers.
  • *Queensland Premier Peter Beattie announces an election date of 7 February.
  • 19 January – Cricketer David Hookes died after a fight outside a Melbourne pub.
  • 23 January – The Queensland Crime and Misconduct Commission has found no evidence of any misconduct by the state's police or judiciary, or by politicians including Premier Peter Beattie and Federal MP Tony Abbott, in relation to the jailing last year of Pauline Hanson and David Ettridge.
  • 28 January –
  • *Port Kembla ethanol explosion
  • *Prime Minister John Howard and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer call for a sporting boycott in Zimbabwe.

    February

  • 1 February – The first Ghan passenger train across Australia from Adelaide to Darwin sets off on its three-day journey.
  • 6 February – The Music Industry Piracy Investigations organization uses an Anton Piller order to raid offices of P2P companies Sharman Networks and Brilliant Digital Entertainment, the homes of their key executives, as well as several internet service providers and universities.
  • 8 February – Peter Beattie's Australian Labor Party Queensland state government is re-elected in a landslide.
  • 11 February – A Black Hawk helicopter reportedly crashed near RAAF Base Amberley with at least five seriously injured.
  • 14 February – Riots break out between police and Aboriginal residents of Sydney suburb Redfern
  • 15 February – Violent riots ensue in the Sydney suburb of Redfern after an Aboriginal boy dies while allegedly fleeing police.
  • 23 February – Premier of Tasmania Jim Bacon resigns after being diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer, handing power to his deputy, Paul Lennon.
  • 25 February – Qantas launches its discount domestic airline, Jetstar.
  • 29 February – Malcolm Turnbull controversially wins Liberal pre-selection for the federal seat of Wentworth, displacing sitting member Peter King.

    March

  • 3 March – A bottle of wine is discovered on board the Queensland Government jet when Indigenous Policy Minister Liddy Clark and her staff visit an alcohol-free Indigenous community at Lockhart River, about 800 km north of Cairns.
  • 11 March – A Senate report on poverty is immediately dismissed by Prime Minister John Howard. The report shows between 2 and 3.5 million Australians, or up to 19 percent of the population, are living in poverty.
  • 20 March – Van Tuong Nguyen is sentenced to death in the Singaporean High Court after being convicted of trafficking 396.2g of heroin into Singapore in December 2002.
  • 27 March – Brisbane City Council Elections. Liberal candidate Campbell Newman becomes Lord Mayor of Brisbane defeating Labor candidate Tim Quinn, thus ending 13 years of Labor government in Brisbane.

    April

  • 5 April – Australia's biggest supplier of the potential explosive ammonium nitrate decides to pull the product from its stores in response to concerns it could be used by terrorists.
  • 14 April – The Family Court allows a thirteen-year-old child, born female, to start preliminary hormone treatment: the child identifies as being male and has been suffering from gender identity disorder.
  • 24 April – John Howard joins Australian troops in Baghdad for ceremonies honoring the country's war dead.

    May

  • 14 May – Hobart woman Mary Donaldson marries Frederick, Crown Prince of Denmark in Copenhagen to become Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark
  • 18 May – The Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement is signed.
  • 25 May – Jetstar commences operations with a maiden flight from Newcastle to Launceston via Melbourne.
  • 29 May – Premier of Victoria Steve Bracks announces plans to amend the Victorian constitution with recognise Aboriginal people. It would be the first time a state formally recognized Aboriginals in its constitution.
  • 31 May – The ABC airs an episode of "Play School" featuring a segment about a little girl and her two "mums". The segment was criticised for exposing children to issues of sexuality.

    June

  • 1 June – Australian Jennifer Hawkins wins the Miss Universe contest, held in Quito, Ecuador.
Defence Minister Robert Hill admits that his office knew of allegations of abuse of Iraqi prisoners.
  • 2 June – Former Qantas baggage handler, 34-year-old Bilal Khazal, is arrested outside his home at Lakemba, in Sydney's south-west, charged with collecting or making documents likely to facilitate terrorist acts. It's the first time someone has been charged with this offense since the laws were passed in 2002.
  • 3 June – President of the United States George W. Bush publicly supports Prime Minister John Howard and criticises Opposition Leader Mark Latham, sparking criticism from the Opposition for intervening in Australian domestic politics.
  • 8 June – A post-mortem examination report is released which reveals that euthanasia crusader, Nancy Crick, had no cancer in her body at the time she took her life on 21 May 2002.
  • 15 June – Prime Minister John Howard releases the Government's Energy Statement which introduced the term "Mandatory Renewable Energy Target", benchmarks set by the government for the amount of non-polluting energy that Australia uses. Australia's current target is two percent renewable energy.
  • 16 June – Defence Minister Robert Hill releases his long-awaited statement to the Senate explaining how it was that he and Prime Minister, John Howard, misled Parliament over Defence knowledge of Iraqi prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib prison.
  • 24 June – Federal Sports Minister Rod Kemp releases details of an inquiry into sports doping. Retired Justice Robert Anderson has one week to question the five implicated cyclists, and use scientific testing to show Cycling Australia and the Australian Olympic Committee that the athletes have no case to answer.
  • 25 June –
  • *The New South Wales Government rushes new water laws through Parliament.
  • *The Premier's Conference is held in Canberra.

    July

  • 2 July – Federal Opposition Leader Mark Latham denies having "king hit" a constituent when he was a councilor on Liverpool Council in Sydney during the 1980s.
  • 5 July –
  • *Australia and Thailand sign a free trade agreement.
  • *Federal Opposition Leader Mark Latham calls an extraordinary media conference to deal with the circulating rumours about him.
  • 23 July – South Australian National Party Karlene Maywald State mp, becomes minister for the River Murray and Minister for Water Security in the Rann Labor government. This represents the first political alliance between the Labor and National parties since the Albert Dunstan Victorian state government of 1935–43.
  • 30 July – Australian cyclist, Jobie Dajka, is dropped from the Australian Athens Olympic team after he admitted to lying to the Robert Anderson doping inquiry. His DNA has been found on syringes and vials in the room of disgraced cyclist Mark French at the Australian Institute of Sport in Adelaide.

    August

  • 3 August – President George W. Bush signs the United States-Australia Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act into law.
  • 6 August –
  • *In a 4–3 ruling, the High Court finds that the existing immigration laws are valid and that failed asylum seekers who cannot be deported can be held in detention indefinitely.
  • *The leader of the extreme right-wing Australian Nationalists Movement in Western Australia, Jack van Tongeren, is taken into custody by police. Police were seeking the self-proclaimed white supremacist to question him about racist graffiti attacks in Perth.
  • *Gavin Hopper, former tennis coach of Mark Philippoussis, is sentenced in Melbourne over the indecent assault of one of his 14-year-old pupils at Wesley College.
  • 9 August – Richard Butler, the controversial Governor of Tasmania, resigns.
  • 13 August – The Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act is passed by the Senate, with amendments. The Labor Party had insisted on amendments designed to protect cheap generic medicine manufacturers.
  • 16 August – Michael Scrafton, a former senior adviser to Peter Reith, reveals that he told John Howard on 7 November 2001 that the Children Overboard claim might be untrue. Mr. Howard said they only discussed the inconclusive nature of the video footage. In light of the new information, the Labor opposition called for a further inquiry, which was convened on 1 September.
  • 17 August – Federal Opposition Leader Mark Latham is hospitalised after being diagnosed with pancreatitis.
  • 20 August –
  • *United States Ambassador to Australia, Tom Schieffer, makes it clear he expects Australia would help the United States defend Taiwan if China invaded Taiwan.
  • *The New South Wales Independent Commission Against Corruption sends Premier Bob Carr a summons to appear before the commission on a charge of contempt. The Opposition called for his resignation.
  • 29 August – John Howard announces that the 2004 federal election will take place on 9 October